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  4. The e-ASTROGAM mission Exploring the extreme Universe with gamma rays in the MeV – GeV range
 
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The e-ASTROGAM mission Exploring the extreme Universe with gamma rays in the MeV – GeV range

Author(s)
Donnarumma, Immacolata  
Alessandro De Angelis
Vincent Tatischeff
Marco Tavani
Subjects

High-Energy Gamma-Ray...

High-Energy Astrophys...

Nuclear Astrophysics

Compton and Pair Crea...

Gamma-Ray Bursts

Active Galactic Nucle...

Jets

Outflows

Multiwavelength Obser...

Counterparts of gravi...

Fermi

DarkMatter

Nucleosynthesis

Early Universe

Supernovae

Cosmic Rays

Cosmic Antimatte

Date Issued
2017-06-01
Abstract
e-ASTROGAM (‘enhanced ASTROGAM’) is a breakthrough Observatory space mission, with a detector composed by a Silicon tracker, a calorimeter, and an anticoincidence system, dedicated to the study of the non-thermal Universe in the photon energy range from 0.3 MeV to 3 GeV – the lower energy limit can be pushed to energies as low as 150 keV, albeit with rapidly degrading angular resolution, for the tracker, and to 30 keV for calorimetric detection. The mission is based on an advanced space-proven detector technology, with unprecedented sensitivity, angular and energy resolution, combined with polarimetric capability. Thanks to its performance in the MeV-GeV domain, substantially improving its predecessors, e-ASTROGAM will open a new window on the non-thermal Universe, making pioneering observations of the most powerful Galactic and extragalactic sources, elucidating the nature of their relativistic outflows and their effects on the surroundings. With a line sensitivity in the MeV energy range one to two orders of magnitude better than previous generation instruments, e-ASTROGAM will determine the origin of key isotopes fundamental for the understanding of supernova explosion and the chemical evolution of our Galaxy. The mission will provide unique data of significant interest to a broad astronomical community, complementary to powerful observatories such as LIGO-Virgo-GEO600-KAGRA, SKA, ALMA, E-ELT, TMT, LSST, JWST, Athena, CTA, IceCube, KM3NeT, and the promise of eLISA.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13025/5197
Journal
Experimental Astronomy
Volume
44
Start Page
25
Start Page
82
DOI
10.1007/s10686-017-9533-6
5a9e64106c5e1b5a034b8b05
URL
https://arxiv.org/pdf/1611.02232.pdf
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10686-017-9533-6
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